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1.
In six open-chest dogs, electrocardiogram- (ECG) controlled pulmonary arterial occlusion was performed during the control period and during the infusions of serotonin and histamine. A temporal series of instantaneous pulmonary capillary pressure and the longitudinal distributions of vascular resistance and compliance were evaluated in the intact left lower lung lobe. In the control period, we found a significant phasic variation of pulmonary capillary pressure (Pc) with the cardiac cycle. The ratio of arterial to venous resistances (Ra/Rv) was 6:4, and the ratio of arterial to capillary compliances (Ca/Cc) was 1:11. During the infusions of serotonin and histamine, Pc showed similar phasic variations, despite significant hemodynamic changes induced by these agents. Serotonin predominantly increased Ra, whereas histamine predominantly increased Rv. The ratio of Rv to the total resistance decreased significantly from 0.42 to 0.32 during the infusion of serotonin and increased significantly to 0.62 during the infusion of histamine. The data suggest that phasic Pc determined by ECG-controlled arterial occlusion reflects the pulsatility in the pulmonary microvascular bed under control conditions and after alterations of the pulmonary vascular resistance by serotonin and histamine.  相似文献   

2.
Acetylcholine's effect on the distribution of vascular resistance and compliance in the canine pulmonary circulation was determined under control and elevated vascular tone by the arterial, venous, and double occlusion techniques in isolated blood-perfused dog lungs at both constant flow and constant pressure. Large and small blood vessel resistances and compliances were studied in lungs given concentrations of acetylcholine ranging from 2.0 ng/ml to 200 micrograms/ml. The results of this study indicate that acetylcholine dilates large arteries at low concentrations (less than or equal to 20 ng/ml) and constricts small and large veins at concentrations of at least 2 micrograms/ml. Characterization of acetylcholine's effects at constant pulmonary blood flow indicates that 1) large artery vasodilation may be endothelial-derived relaxing factor-mediated because the dilation is blocked with methylene blue; 2) a vasodilator of the arachidonic acid cascade (blocked by ibuprofen), probably prostacyclin, lessens acetylcholine's pressor effects; 3) when vascular tone was increased, acetylcholine's hemodynamic effects were attenuated; and 4) acetylcholine decreased middle compartment and large vessle compliance under control but not elevated vascular tone. Under constant pressure at control vascular tone acetylcholine increases resistance in all segments except the large artery, and at elevated vascular tone the pressor effects were enhanced, and large artery resistance was increased.  相似文献   

3.
To study the effect of chronic cigarette smoke exposure on the resistive properties of the pulmonary vasculature, left lower lobes from 12 control beagles and 6 beagles who had smoked cigarettes (50 cigarettes/wk for 40 wk) were perfused in situ to measure the vascular pressure-flow relationship and the resistance of the three vascular segments with the arterial and venous occlusion technique. In control subjects the vascular resistance in the arterial, middle, and venous segments was 23, 36, and 41% of the total, respectively. The segmental distribution of vascular resistance was not significantly different in the cigarette smoke-exposed dogs, despite the fact that the absolute values were 30-40% less than that of the control group. The longitudinal distribution of resistance among the three vascular segments and their response to drugs were different in beagles than was previously found in mongrels. In all beagles the veins were considerably more reactive than arteries. Vasoconstriction with serotonin (5-HT) prostaglandin F2 alpha (PGF2 alpha), norepinephrine, histamine, and methacholine (M) infusion occurred predominantly in the veins. The effect of PGF2 alpha and 5-HT was totally different than that previously observed in mongrels in which the constriction was predominantly in the arteries. Chronic cigarette smoking reduced the basal pulmonary vascular resistance and attenuated the venoconstrictor response to 5-HT and M but potentiated the hypoxic pressor response of the microvessels.  相似文献   

4.
Occlusion pressures vs. micropipette pressures in the pulmonary circulation   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
Because of the discrepancies between the arterial and venous occlusion technique and the micropuncture technique in estimating pulmonary capillary pressure gradient, we compared measurements made with the two techniques in the same preparations (isolated left lower lobe of dog lung). In addition, we also obtained direct and reliable measurements of pressures in 0.9-mm arteries and veins using a retrograde catheterization technique, as well as a microvascular pressure made with the double-occlusion technique. The following conclusions were made from dog lobes perfused with autologous blood at normal flow rate of 500-600 ml/min and pressure gradient of 12 mmHg. 1) The double-occlusion technique measures pressure in the capillaries, 2) a small pressure gradient (0.5 mmHg) exists between 30- to 50-micron arteries and veins, 3) a large pressure gradient occurs in arteries and veins greater than 0.9 mm, 4) the arterial and venous occlusion techniques measure pressures in vessels that are less than 900 microns diam but greater than 50 microns, very likely close to 100 microns, 5) serotonin constricts arteries (larger and smaller than 0.9 mm) whereas histamine constricts veins (larger and smaller than 0.9 mm). Thus three different techniques (small retrograde catheter, arterial and venous occlusion, and micropuncture) show consistent results, confirming the presence of significant resistance in large arteries and veins with minimal resistance in the microcirculation.  相似文献   

5.
The current study was done to test the hypothesis that protein kinase C (PKC) inhibitors prevent the increase in pulmonary vascular resistance and compliance that occurs in isolated, blood-perfused dog lungs during hypoxia. Pulmonary vascular resistances and compliances were measured with vascular occlusion techniques. Hypoxia significantly increased pulmonary arterial resistance, pulmonary venous resistance, and pulmonary capillary pressure and decreased total vascular compliance by decreasing both microvascular and large-vessel compliances. The nonspecific PKC inhibitor staurosporine (10(-7) M), the specific PKC blocker calphostin C (10(-7) M), and the specific PKC isozyme blocker G?-6976 (10(-7) M) inhibited the effect of hypoxia on pulmonary vascular resistance and compliance. In addition, the PKC activator thymeleatoxin (THX; 10(-7) M) increased pulmonary vascular resistance and compliance in a manner similar to that in hypoxia, and the L-type voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channel blocker nifedipine (10(-6) M) inhibited the response to both THX and hypoxia. These results suggest that PKC inhibition blocks the hypoxic pressor response and that the pharmacological activation of PKC by THX mimics the hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstrictor response. In addition, L-type voltage-dependent Ca(2+) channel blockade may prevent the onset of the hypoxia- and PKC-induced vasoconstrictor response in the canine pulmonary vasculature.  相似文献   

6.
We used an improved version of the low-viscosity bolus method to evaluate longitudinal (arterial-to-venous) differences in the sensitivity of the dog lung lobe vasculature to selected vasoconstrictor stimuli, including hypoxia, and serotonin, histamine, and norepinephrine infusions. This method revealed a bimodal distribution of local vascular resistance vs. cumulative vascular volume under the zone 3 conditions studied. Our interpretation of the two modes of relatively high resistance is that they correspond to high resistance per unit volume segments of the arteries and veins upstream and downstream from the relatively low resistance per unit volume capillary bed. Thus an increase in the height of the upstream and downstream modes of the resistance distribution suggests constriction in small arteries and veins, respectively. Horizontal displacement of the modes along the cumulative volume axis suggests changes in the distribution of volume among the arteries, veins, and capillary bed. By use of these criteria, the results are consistent with the concept that each of the vasoconstrictor stimuli studied had a different longitudinal response pattern. Hypoxia constricted mainly small arteries, whereas serotonin constricted small and large arteries. Histamine constricted large and small veins, and norepinephrine constricted large and small veins and arteries.  相似文献   

7.
To investigate the influence of vasomotor tone and vessel compliance on pulmonary segmental vascular resistance, we determined the longitudinal distribution of vascular pressures in 15 isolated blood perfused lungs of newborn lambs. We measured pulmonary arterial and left atrial pressures and by micropuncture the pressures in 20- to 80-micron-diam subpleural arterioles and venules, both before and after paralyzing the vasculature with papaverine hydrochloride. In five lungs we also determined the microvascular pressure profile during reverse perfusion. In lungs with baseline vasomotor tone, approximately 32% of the total pressure drop was in arteries, approximately 32% in microvessels, and approximately 36% in veins. With elimination of vasomotor tone, arterial and venous resistances decreased to one-fifth and one-half of base-line values, respectively, indicating that vasomotor tone contributed mainly toward arterial resistance. During reverse perfusion, the pressure drop in veins was similar to that in arteries during forward perfusion, suggesting that the compliance of arteries and veins is comparable. We conclude that vascular tone and compliance are important factors that determine the distribution of segmental vascular resistance in lungs of the newborn.  相似文献   

8.
The effects of PGA1 and PGA2 were studied in the canine pulmonary vascular bed. Infusion of PGA1 into the lobar artery decreased lobar arterial and venous pressure but did not change left atrial pressure. In contrast, PGA2 infusion increased lobar arterial and venous pressure and the effects of this substance were similar in experiments in which the lung was perfused with dextran or with blood. These data indicate that under conditions of controlled blood flow PGA1 decreases pulmonary vascular resistance by dilating intrapulmonary veins and to a lesser extent vessels upstream to the small veins, presumably small arteries. The present data show that PGA2 increases pulmonary vascular resistance by constricting intrapulmonary veins and upstream vessels. The predominant effect of PGA2 was on upstream vessels and the pressor effect was not due to interaction with formed elements in the blood or platelet aggregation.  相似文献   

9.
In mature animals histamine infusion typically causes an H1-mediated increase and H2-mediated decrease in pulmonary vascular resistance (PVR). Moreover, low histamine concentrations can cause H1-mediated relaxation of vascular strips in mature animals, and in newborn animals histamine infusion causes only H1-mediated decreases in PVR. The mechanisms responsible for the different H1-mediated responses are unknown. We used an inflow-outflow occlusion technique to identify the sites of H1- and H2-mediated responses in lungs of developing lambs. Histamine was infused at 1.0 and 10.0 micrograms.kg-1.min-1 in control and H1- and H2-blocked lungs of newborn and juvenile lambs under "normoxic" and hypoxic conditions and in hypoxic H2-blocked lungs of mature sheep. In newborns histamine caused significant H1-mediated decreases in resistance across the arterial (delta Pa) and middle (delta Pm) segments of the circuit during both normoxia and hypoxia. In normoxic juveniles low-dose histamine caused H1-mediated decreases in the resistance across delta Pa and delta Pm, but the resistances across delta Pm rose above baseline at the higher dose. The venous segment exhibited only a high-dose increase in resistance. During hypoxia, the high-dose H1-mediated pressor response of delta Pm was attenuated compared with that during normoxia; however, the increase in venous resistance was unaffected. In hypoxic mature sheep, no low dose H1-mediated decrease in segmental resistances was seen, but at the higher dose an increase in all resistances occurred.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

10.
Segmental vascular resistances and compliances in dog lung   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
The segmental distribution of vascular resistances and compliances were evaluated in isolated blood perfused lung lobes using arterial, venous, and double-occlusion pressures and were compared with filtration midpoint capillary pressures (Pc,f). We separated total vascular resistance (RT) and compliance (CT) into large artery (Ra, Ca), large vein (Rv, Cv), and microvascular compartments (Rmc, Cmc) at base-line and increased vascular pressures and during infusions of histamine, serotonin, and norepinephrine. In control lobes, double-occlusion pressure (Pdo) closely approximated Pc,f at all vascular pressures. Pre- and postcapillary resistance were approximately equal when referenced to either Pc,f or Pdo. Although Rmc comprised 42% of RT and Cmc constituted 76% of CT, a twofold increase in base-line Pc,f caused RT to decrease to 67% and Rmc/RT to 29% of control values, whereas CT decreased to 87% and Cmc/CT decreased to 88% of control values over the same Pc,f range. Mean static CT was 2.25 +/- 0.09 ml X cmH2O-1. 100 g-1, whereas dynamic CT was 1.54 +/- 0.08 ml X cmH2O-1. 100 g-1, or only 68% of static vascular compliance. Drug infusions increased mean RT from 4.2- to 5.3-fold and significantly decreased both static and dynamic CT. Although all vascular segments were constricted, histamine affected primarily large veins, serotonin increased Ra greater than Rv, and norepinephrine constricted upstream and downstream vessels about equally. Increased Pc,f in the presence of these drugs decreased RT significantly in every case primarily through attenuation of the drug vasoconstrictor effect on Rmc and decreased CT primarily due to a decrease in Cmc, but increased Cmc/(Ca + Cv). Thus the microvascular compartment appears to be the major site of both fluid filtration and vascular compliance and contributes significantly to total vascular resistance. Drug infusions constricted large and small vessel compartments as defined here, but increased Pc,f attenuated microvascular vasoconstriction and to a lesser extent large vessel vasoconstriction resulting in a reduced microvascular resistance in both drug-treated and control lobes. This effect can be attributed to recruitment and/or distension of microvessels and distension of larger vessels.  相似文献   

11.
Intrahepatic pressure (9.4 +/- 0.3 mmHg; 1 mmHg = 133.32 Pa), measured proximal to a hepatic venous resistance site, was insignificantly different from portal venous pressure (9.6 +/- 0.4 mmHg). This lobar venous pressure is not wedged hepatic venous pressure as it is measured from side holes in a catheter with a sealed tip. Validation of the lobar venous pressure measurement was done in a variety of ways and using different sizes and configurations of catheters. The site of hepatic venous resistance in the dog is localized to a narrow sphincterlike region about 0.5 cm in length and within 1-2 cm (usually within 1 cm) of the junction of the vena cava and hepatic veins. Sinusoidal and portal venous resistance appears insignificant in the basal state and large increases in liver blood volume (histamine infusion or passive vena caval occlusion) or large decreases in liver blood volume (passive vascular occlusion) do not alter the insignificant pressure gradient between portal and lobar venous pressures. Norepinephrine infusion (1.25 microgram X kg-1 X min-1 intraportal) and hepatic sympathetic nerve stimulation (10 Hz) led to a significantly greater rise in portal venous pressure than in lobar venous pressure, indicating some presinusoidal (and (or) sinusoidal) constriction and this indicates that lobar venous pressure cannot be assumed under all conditions to accurately reflect portal pressure. However, most of the rise in portal venous pressure induced by intraportal infusion of norepinephrine or nerve stimulation and virtually all of the pressure rise induced by histamine could be attributed to the postsinusoidal resistance site.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

12.
Presson, Robert G., Jr., Said H. Audi, Christopher C. Hanger, Gerald M. Zenk, Richard A. Sidner, John H. Linehan, Wiltz W. Wagner, Jr., and Christopher A. Dawson. Anatomic distribution ofpulmonary vascular compliance. J. Appl.Physiol. 84(1): 303-310, 1998.Previously, thepressure changes after arterial and venous occlusion have been used tocharacterize the longitudinal distribution of pulmonary vascularresistance with respect to vascular compliance using compartmentalmodels. However, the compartments have not been defined anatomically.Using video microscopy of the subpleural microcirculation, we havemeasured the flow changes in ~40-µm arterioles and venules aftervenous, arterial, and double occlusion maneuvers. The quasi-steadyflows through these vessels after venous occlusion permitted anestimation of the compliance in three anatomic segments: arteries >40µm, veins >40 µm, and vessels <40 µm in diameter. We foundthat ~65% of the total pulmonary vascular compliance was in vessels<40 µm, presumably mostly capillaries. The transient portions ofthe pressure and flow data after venous, arterial, and double occlusionwere consistent with most of the arterial compliance being upstreamfrom most of the arterial resistance and most of the venous compliancebeing downstream from most of the venous resistance.

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13.
Barman, Scott A. Pulmonary vasoreactivity to serotoninduring hypoxia is modulated by ATP-sensitive potassium channels. J. Appl. Physiol. 83(2): 569-574, 1997.The role of ATP-sensitive K+-channel modulation in thecanine pulmonary vascular response to serotonin during hypoxia wasdetermined in the isolated blood-perfused dog lung. Pulmonary vascularresistances and compliances were measured by using vascular occlusiontechniques. Under normoxia, serotonin(105 M) significantlyincreased precapillary and postcapillary resistances and pulmonarycapillary pressure and decreased total vascular compliance bydecreasing both microvascular and large-vessel compliances. Duringhypoxia, the effect of serotonin was potentiated on both precapillaryand postcapillary resistance and capillary pressure, as well as onmicrovascular compliance and large-vessel compliance. Under normoxia,the ATP-sensitive K+-channelopener cromakalim (105 M)inhibited the serotonergic response on postcapillary resistance andmicrovascular compliance, whereas during hypoxia cromakalim inhibitedthe potentiated effect of serotonin on both precapillary andpostcapillary resistance, capillary pressure, and both microvascular and large-vessel compliances. These results indicate that canine pulmonary vasoreactivity to serotonin is heightened under hypoxic conditions and that ATP-sensitiveK+ channels modulate the pressorresponse to serotonin, an effect that is more pronounced duringhypoxia.

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14.
Isolated ferret and canine lungs were used to validate a method for assessing determinants of vascular volume in the pulmonary circulation. With left atrial pressure (Pla) constant at 5 mmHg, flow (Q) was raised in steps over a physiological range. Changes in vascular volume (delta V) with each increment in Q were determined as the opposite of changes in perfusion system reservoir weight or from the increase in lung weight. At each level of Q, the pulmonary arterial and left atrial cannulas were simultaneously occluded, allowing all vascular pressures to equilibrate at the same static pressure (Ps), which was equal to the compliance-weighted average pressure in the circulation before occlusion. Hypoxia (inspired PO2 25 Torr) in ferret lungs, which causes intense constriction in arterial extra-alveolar vessels, had no effect on the slope of the Ps-Q relationship, interpreted to represent the resistance downstream from compliance (control 0.025 +/- 0.006 mmHg.ml-1.min, hypoxia 0.030 +/- 0.013). The Ps-axis intercept increased from 8.94 +/- 0.50 to 13.43 +/- 1.52 mmHg, indicating a modest increase in the effective back-pressure to flow downstream from compliant regions. The compliance of the circulation, obtained from the slope of the relationship between delta V and Ps, was unaffected by hypoxia (control 0.52 +/- 0.08 ml/mmHg, hypoxia 0.56 +/- 0.08). In contrast, histamine in canine lungs, which causes constriction in veins, caused the slope of the Ps-Q relationship to increase from 0.013 +/- 0.007 to 0.032 +/- 0.006 mmHg.ml-1.min (P less than 0.05) and the compliance to decrease from 3.51 +/- 0.56 to 1.68 +/- 0.37 ml/mmHg (P less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

15.
Distribution of pulmonary vascular resistance in experimental fibrosis   总被引:3,自引:0,他引:3  
To elucidate mechanisms of pulmonary hypertension in interstitial fibrosis, we compared the left lower lobes (LLL) of six dogs in which fibrosis was induced by radiation and bleomycin with the normal right lower lobes (RLL) for 1) slope and intercept of the vascular pressure-flow (P-Q) curves, 2) segmental resistances with arterial and venous occlusion under base-line conditions, after serotonin and vasodilators, and 3) light-microscopic morphology and morphometry. We found that 1) the total volume and vascular compliance of the fibrotic LLL were five and four times less, respectively, than controls, 2) the slope and intercept of the P-Q curves in the LLL were 154.0 +/- 65.8 (SE) mmHg.l-1.min-1 and 8.2 +/- 1.5 mmHg, respectively, compared with 18.3 +/- 2.3 and 3.2 +/- 0.9 for the RLL, 3) the resistance of the arterial, middle, and venous segments in the LLL were higher than in the RLL, but middle segment resistance rose disproportionately, and 4) constriction of the arterial segment with serotonin was similar in LLL and RLL, and vasodilators were ineffective. Histologically, fibrosis involved 36% of the lung, and the capillary bed was severely obliterated. Arteries showed an increased percentage of medial and intimal thickening and peripheral muscularization; venous abnormalities were less marked. We conclude that pulmonary fibrosis increases vascular resistance mainly in the middle segment, largely by loss of tissue and obliteration of the microvasculature.  相似文献   

16.
The bovine pulmonary vascular response to alpha- and beta-agonists was studied using an awake intact calf model. Pulmonary arterial pressure, pulmonary arterial wedge pressure, left atrial pressure, systemic arterial pressure, and cardiac output were measured in response to 3 min infusions of isoproterenol (beta-agonist; 0.12, 0.24, 0.48, 0.9, and 1.8 micrograms X kg-1 X min-1) and phenylephrine (alpha-agonist, 0.15, 0.30, 0.60, 1.15, and 2.30 micrograms X kg-1 X min-1). Phenylephrine caused an increase in vascular resistance in the pulmonary arterial and venous compartments. The slope of the resistance in response to phenylephrine was greater in the pulmonary arterial than pulmonary venous circulation. Isoproterenol resulted in a dose-dependent decrease in vascular resistance in the pulmonary arteries and veins. The vascular resistance was decreased to the same level in the pulmonary arteries and veins although the arteries showed a greater percent change. In addition, isoproterenol infusion resulted in a transient decrease in arterial pH and increase in values for packed cell volume and haemoglobin.  相似文献   

17.
Our objectives were 1) to describe the quantitative light microscopy and ultrastructure of newborn lamb lungs and 2) to correlate hemodynamic changes during normoxia and hypoxia with the morphology. By light microscopy, we measured the percent muscle thickness (%MT) and peripheral muscularization of pulmonary arteries and veins from 25 lambs aged less than 24 h, 2-4 days, 2 wk, and 1 mo. At the same ages, lungs were isolated and perfused in situ and, after cyclooxygenase blockade with indomethacin, total, arterial (delta Pa), middle (delta Pm), and venous pressure gradients at inspired O2 fractions of 0.28 (mild hyperoxia) and 0.04 (hypoxia) were determined with inflow-outflow occlusion. During mild hyperoxia, delta Pa and delta Pm fell significantly between 2-4 days and 2 wk, whereas during hypoxia, only delta Pm fell. The %MT of all arteries (less than 50 to greater than 1,000 microns diam) decreased, and peripheral muscularization of less than 100-microns-diam arteries fell between less than 4 days and greater than 2 wk. Our data suggest that 1) the %MT of arteries determines normoxic pulmonary vascular resistance, because only arterial and middle segment resistance fell, 2) peripheral muscularization is a major determinant of hypoxic pulmonary vasoconstriction, because we observed a fall with age in peripheral muscularization of less than 100-micron-diam arteries and in delta Pm with hypoxia, and 3) the arterial limit of the middle segment defined by inflow-outflow occlusion lies in 100- to 1,000-microns-diam arteries.  相似文献   

18.
Diminished constriction of arteries and veins following exposure to microgravity or bed rest is associated with a reduced ability to augment peripheral vascular resistance (PVR) and stroke volume during orthostasis. We tested the hypothesis that small mesenteric arteries and veins, which are not exposed to large pressure shifts during simulated microgravity via head-down tail suspension (HDT), will exhibit decrements in adrenergic constriction after HDT in rats. Small mesenteric arteries and veins from control (Con; n = 41) and HDT (n = 35) male Sprague-Dawley rats were studied in vitro. Vasoactive responsiveness to norepinephrine (NE) in arteries (10(-9) to 10(-4) M) and veins (pressure-diameter responses from 2 to 12 cmH(2)O after incubation in 10(-6) or 10(-4) M NE) were evaluated. Plasma concentrations of atrial (ANP) and NH(2)-terminal prohormone brain (NT-proBNP) natriuretic peptides were also measured. In mesenteric arteries, sensitivity and maximal responsiveness to NE were reduced with HDT. In mesenteric veins there was a diminished venoconstriction to NE at any given pressure in HDT. Plasma concentrations of both ANP and NT-proBNP were increased with HDT, and maximal arterial and venous constrictor responses to NE after incubation with 10(-7) M ANP or brain natriuretic peptide (BNP) were diminished. These data demonstrate that, in a vascular bed not subjected to large hydrodynamic differences with HDT, both small arteries and veins have a reduced responsiveness to adrenergic stimulation. Elevated levels of circulating ANP or NT-proBNP could adversely affect the ability of these vascular beds to constrict in vivo and conceivably could alter the intrinsic constrictor properties of these vessels with long-term exposure.  相似文献   

19.
We have determined the sites of hypoxic vasoconstriction in ferret lungs. Lungs of five 3- to 5-wk-old and five adult ferrets were isolated and perfused with blood. Blood flow was adjusted initially to keep pulmonary arterial pressure at 20 cmH2O and left atrial and airway pressures at 6 and 8 cmH2O, respectively (zone 3). Once adjusted, flow was kept constant throughout the experiment. In each lung, pressures were measured in subpleural 20- to 50-microns-diam arterioles and venules with the micropipette servo-nulling method during normoxia (PO2 approximately 100 Torr) and hypoxia (PO2 less than 50 Torr). In normoxic adult ferret lungs, approximately 40% of total vascular resistance was in arteries, approximately 40% was in microvessels, and approximately 20% was in veins. With hypoxia, the total arteriovenous pressure drop increased by 68%. Arterial and venous pressure drops increased by 92 and 132%, respectively, with no change in microvascular pressure drop. In 3- to 5-wk-old ferret lungs, the vascular pressure profile during normoxia and the response to hypoxia were similar to those in adult lungs. We conclude that, in ferret lungs, arterial and venous resistances increase equally during hypoxia, resulting in increased microvascular pressures for fluid filtration.  相似文献   

20.
Pulmonary vascular compliance and viscoelasticity   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
When dog lung lobes were perfused at constant arterial inflow rate, occlusion of the venous outflow (VO) produced a rapid jump in venous pressure (Pv) followed by a slower rise in both arterial pressure (Pa) and Pv. During the slow rise Pa(t) and Pv(t) tended to converge and become concave upward as the volume of blood in the lungs increased. We compared the dynamic vascular volume vs. pressure curves obtained after VO with the static volume vs. pressure curves obtained by dye dilution. The slope of the static curve (the static compliance, Cst) was always larger than the slope of the dynamic curve (the dynamic compliance, Cdyn). In addition, the Cdyn decreased with increasing blood flow rate. When venous occlusion (VO) was followed after a short time interval by arterial occlusion (AO) such that the lobe was isovolumic, both Pa and Pv fell with time to a level that was below either pressure at the instant of AO. In an attempt to explain these observations a compartmental model was constructed in which the hemodynamic resistance and vascular compliance were volume dependent and the vessel walls were viscoelastic. These features of the model could account for the convergence and upward concavity of the Pa and Pv curves after VO and the pressure relaxation in the isovolumic state after AO, respectively. According to the model analysis, the difference between Cst and Cdyn and the flow dependence of Cdyn are due to wall viscosity and volume dependence of compliance, respectively. Model analysis also suggested ways of evaluating changes in the viscoelasticity of the lobar vascular bed. Hypoxic vasoconstriction that increased total vascular resistance also decreased Cst and Cdyn and appeared to increase the vessel wall viscosity.  相似文献   

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